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Warm Octopus w. Potato and Parsley Recipe

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This is one of my favourite things year round, served lukewarm in winter or at room temperature in summer.

Octopus meat is beautifully tender when properly cooked. It has a very mild sweet-savoury flavour which some compare to chicken and some to squid though neither comparison really stands up in my view. Perhaps crab or scallop come closer. When well prepared, it really is very easy to like. Its flavour is mild, unless you cook it with its own ink, it has a nice mouth feel and is very easy to eat: no bones, no shells, no debris. It is also very healthy eating. It is a low calorie, high protein, low fat, low carb, zero-sugar food. It is rich in anti-oxidant selenium and very high in iron, B vitamins and zinc. On the down side it is high in sodium and cholesterol - not a problem for most people, but you may have a specific medical reason for forgoing this delicacy.

When I was growing up in Malta it was common summer sport for the boys to tickle octopi out of their hiding places using a fork, stringing up them up in a row on a fishing rod or bamboo pole to proudly take home for Mum to cook. To soften up the flesh, which would otherwise be very tough, they would beat and beat the octopus on the rocks, a common practice round the Mediterranean. Otherwise at home you would need to beat with a steak hammer for about 10 minutes, a long and potentially messy job. You don't have to do this if you freeze a fresh octopus overnight and cook from frozen. Or buy frozen or just defrosted. Frozen is good for octopus: the flavour is not impaired at all, the flesh tenderizes much more quickly and the octopus comes ready prepared and cleaned.

I have two ways of preparing octopus, both simplicity itself. One is the classic Italian way and the other is what I call the Greek way because learnt it from my friend Eleftheria. The Italian way is to cook your defrosted or very well beaten octopus in a pan of boiling water along with a red wine cork or two. The theory is the traces of tannin or else a particular enzyme found in the cork help to tenderize it. I doubt this is true but as I'm never without a red wine cork or two, I do put one in, a kind of superstition! I don't do the popping in and out of the water three times though, another Italian practice that claims to make octopus become tender faster.
So what you do is bring a large pot of water to the boil and then lower the octopus into the pot so that it is submerged and totally covered. Turn the heat down and simmer a defrosted octopus for 40 to 60 minutes or until tender - calculate about 20 minutes for every 500g ( 1.1 pounds) . Test as if it were a baked potato: a wooden toothpick or skewer should pierce it and go through easily without encountering any resistance. Finally - and this is important for a truly tender octopus - leave it to cool down slowly in the pot covered in the cooking liquid. I usually add fresh bay leaves or a piece of cinnamon stick to the cooking water to keep fishy aromas to a minimum rather than for flavouring purposes. This time I tired a small star anise, and loved it.

The "Greek" style, which may or may not be typically Greek is even more straight forward. Just choose a heavy bottomed pan with a tight fitting lid, pop the octopus in, cover, place on the lowest possible heat and leave till done, calculating timing as before. The octopus braises and steams gently taking on a splendid purple hue from the head to the tip of its tightly curled tentacles, as you can see in my photo. As it loses its water it shrinks and cooks to supreme tenderness. It is ready when it has re-absorbed the liquid it released, but don't cook too long as left too long the octopus can end up dried up or worse, burnt and stuck to the pot. The drawback with this method is that the octopus remains pretty salty. What I usually do is stay Greek and make grilled octopus. I cut the cooked octopus up into small pieces without rubbing off the skin or suckers and grill it gently on a hot cast iron ridged grill pan till the outside is lightly charred with crispy bits, then drizzle with best EVO oil when done. This way I end up with pre-salted octopus pieces that are crisped on the outside and tender on the inside, just sublime! Otherwise I add the chopped octopus pieces to a tomato sauce and serve it on an on unsalted creamy polenta, putting the octopus' saltiness to good use in seasoning the polenta.

Because octopus has such a delicate flavour, the Italian instinct is to avoid adding sauces, dressings or extraneous flavours with would mask and overpower the octopus' own subtle taste. Potatoes and polenta are perfect partners that act as a gentle background to bring it out and show it off, for the octopus is inevitably the protagonist of the dish it features in. The popular Polipo con Patate "salad" is, as far as I know, made everywhere along Italy's 7,600 kilometer coastline (over 4, 700 miles). So far once here is a recipe for a dish that is national, an Italian dish not one from one of Italy's regional cuisines.

Prep time:
Cook time:
Servings: 2
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Ingredients

Cost per serving $0.00 view details
  • For two people as one course meal:
  • A cleaned defrosted octopus weighing about 800g (1 lb 12 oz)
  • 3 medium Yukon Gold type potatoes (not boiling or new potatoes)
  • A good sized bunch of flat leaf parsley
  • Olive oil to taste

Directions

  1. Insalata Tiepida di Polipo e Patate
  2. -----------------------
  3. Cook the octopus till tender according to one of the methods described above and when cooled rub off the skin and suckers until you are left with just the nice pink tinged flesh. This is easy, the (perfectly edible) skin and suckers just come away.
  4. Cut the head into slices and chop the tentacles into small lengths. Taste a little piece to check for saltiness.
  5. Strip leaves from the parsley and chop not too finely.
  6. Cook the potatoes in their skins, then hold on a fork to peel while still warm. Remove any eyes and and chop into chunks.
  7. Place the potatoes in a bowl drizzle over a few tablespoons of olive oil and toss gently to mix. I sometimes use my hands if the potatoes seem fragile - olive oil is a nice skin softener! Mix in the octopus next and finally the chopped parsley.
  8. Though the Italian named means " Warm octopus and potato salad", it is customary to serve this lukewarm in winter and at room temperature in summer, accompanied by a glass of dry white wine.
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Nutrition Facts

Amount Per Serving %DV
Serving Size 0g
Recipe makes 2 servings
Calories 0  
Calories from Fat 0 0%
Total Fat 0.0g 0%
Saturated Fat 0.0g 0%
Trans Fat 0.0g  
Cholesterol 0mg 0%
Sodium 0mg 0%
Potassium 0mg 0%
Total Carbs 0.0g 0%
Dietary Fiber 0.0g 0%
Sugars 0.0g 0%
Protein 0.0g 0%

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